On Sun, 2 Feb 2003, K. Ghosh wrote:

> I have a large collection of vinyl records, which I am planning to


lucky you, they sound so much better

> PI-166MHz with 32MB RAM and 1GB free HDD partition, and a Yamaha 724
> sound card. OS is Debian Woody.

to get a cd quality output you need to sample it at 44Khz, i think the cpu 
is fast enough for that. But make sure to have all dma optimizations on 
the disk when you are doing this, also as minimum of other processes as 
possible.


plug the sound to your sound cards input and fire off

rec -c 2 -r 44100 -f u -t au -v 0.9 dump.au


you can also get a wav dump directly using -t wav. But unix sound editors 
generally support au more frequently, but nowadays it shouldnt be an 
issue.


There would be some hiss and clicks, for that you can try sox's lowpass 
filter but i found the results of anoi really good. I dont remember the 
url search google for anoi and noise filter


then you would need a sound editor like snd to cut up the dump into 
seperate tracks ( that is if you want to ) and burn it on a cd. 

http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/software/snd/


-- 
linux clippy: (1)Tux waddles in, (2)Asks you to RTFM, (3)Tux waddles out
                    -- filched and modified from Siddharth Sriram's .sig
                                                         


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